
What if the same medication helping people lose weight could also reduce cravings for alcohol, gambling, nicotine, and other addictive behaviors?
That’s exactly what researchers are starting to uncover — and the findings are getting a lot of attention in both the medical and addiction recovery worlds.
A recently discussed study involving more than 600,000 veterans found that people using GLP-1 medications had:
A 14% lower risk of developing a new substance use disorder
A 40% reduction in overdoses
A 50% reduction in substance-related deaths
Those numbers are hard to ignore.
But what may be even more interesting is what people are reporting in real life: they simply don’t want things the same way anymore.
People taking GLP-1 medications for weight loss have shared that they suddenly lost interest in alcohol, compulsive shopping, gambling, overeating, and other behaviors that once...
You’ve probably heard all the buzz about Ozempic, hailed by many as a breakthrough weight-loss drug. But did you know its active ingredient, semaglutide, might also hold promise in a completely different area—addiction? That’s right, folks are buzzing about its potential to curb addictive behaviors, and while there’s no published research on it just yet, the anecdotal evidence is piling up. Let’s dive in.
Semaglutide works by mimicking a hormone that helps you feel full faster, which is why it’s so effective for weight loss. But here’s where things get interesting: countless users on platforms like Reddit are claiming that the drug has unexpectedly helped them reduce or eliminate other behaviors, from drinking and smoking to compulsive shopping and even skin-picking.
While these are just personal stories (not hard science), the consistency of these experiences is enough to make you wonder—cou...
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